Ten Lost In October 2007 Caravan Crash
The families of nine skydivers who
died last October when their Cessna 208B Caravan went down near
White Pass, WA are continuing their pursuit of numerous lawsuits
against Cessna, and Goodrich Corp, alleging the Caravan is unsafe
for flight in icing conditions.
As ANN reported, the nine
skydivers, and their pilot, were killed when the turboprop aircraft
reportedly encountered airframe icing in IMC as it flew from Star,
ID to Shelton, WA. The accident was the deadliest in the US in
2007, reports the Everett (WA) Herald.
Despite apparent evidence pointing to other possible
circumstances for the crash -- the aircraft was not under an IFR
flight plan, for example -- a slew of lawsuits filed from November
29 to January 28 through Chicago's Nolan Law Group allege the
Caravan's design is to blame for the latest loss of 10 lives, and
the type should have its FIKI certification revoked by the FAA.
"Our commitment to the families is this: When we're through with
this case, this Cessna 208B will no longer be certified to fly into
icing conditions," said Dean Brett, a Bellingham, WA-based lawyer.
"Too many planes have gone down. Too many people have died."
In December 2006, the Canadian Transport Safety Board took the
drastic step in recommending restrictions on Caravan operations in
anything but light icing. Despite the controversy, Cessna spokesman
Doug Oliver stresses the FAA has deemed the Caravan safe.
"The (Federal Aviation Administration) has certified it to fly
in icing conditions," said Oliver. "They certify every aircraft the
same way. They have the same requirements for all airplanes. The
tests are the same. The company is held to the same standard for
every airplane." Oliver declined further comment, due to the
ongoing litigation.
Brett counters a common theme throughout a number of Caravan
downings, are allegations the Caravan's wing-deicing failed to keep
the wings clean. Brett is working with the Nolan firm on the case,
as part of a single legal proceeding before a US District Court
judge in Kansas City, MO.
The suit against Cessna encompasses other lawsuits involving
Caravan downings in Idaho, Texas, Manitoba, Moscow, and Bolivia,
according to Nolan attorney Jerry Skinner. The multi-jurisdictional
proceeding is intended to provide a baseline legal precedent,
claiming the Caravan's design is to blame for icing incidents --
which lawyers may then cite in their separate cases against
the planemaker.
Brett is blunt about his clients' intentions. "Our goal is to
decertify the plane," he said. "We're going to make it cheaper to
decertify the plane than to pay for the deaths that they
cause."